intro to dcim - alphapoint · pdf file• integrated change configuration (cmdb) level 5:...
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THE CHALLENGE…. Solve complexity The trend for consolidation and construction of ever-‐larger data centers has been basically driven by economy-‐of-‐scale benefits. This trend is accelerated and facilitated by technological advances such as Web-‐based applications, system virtualization, more powerful servers all being delivered in a smaller footprint with an overabundance of low-‐cost bandwidth. In the past, most data centers were relatively small utilizing local, dedicated IT and facilities staff that could manage almost everything with manual processes and tools such as spreadsheets and diagrams. As data centers have grown in size and complexity, managing this way has become increasingly difficult. It has now become evident that IT and facilities professionals need better tools and processes to effectively manage the enormous inventory of physical assets and the complexity of the modern data center infrastructure. Experience shows that once a data center approaches 50-‐75 racks, management via spreadsheets and Visio becomes unwieldy and ineffective. As the rate and volume of change in the data center has increased, the accuracy of spreadsheets has decreased. Prompting both corporate as well as government regulatory attention and action, the outward expansion and increasing density of modern data centers have created serious space and energy consumption concerns. The IDC has forecasted that data center power and estimated cooling costs to almost $45 billion in 2010. Overnight, the need for data center infrastructure and asset management tools has now become an overwhelming, high-‐priority challenge for IT and facilities management. Why DCIM? In order to fix these problems, IT and facilities professionals need solutions and processes designed specifically to effectively manage the huge inventory of physical assets and to optimize the use of power, cooling and space of the modern data center infrastructure. This transition from generic tools to purpose built software is where data center infrastructure management (DCIM) software begins. “75%1 of downtime results from human error, lack of accurate information leads to an increased chance of error and downtime” Rick Schunknecht, The 451 Group Uptime Institute, June 2011
Leading causes of decreased data center efficiency and spiraling costs
Utilization, despite technology advances, is still very low
Increasing demand for IT to meet changing business needs
Power and cooling accounts for 40% of the total budget
Over 50% of existing data centers will be out of space within 3 years
Guide to Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)
THE SOLUTION…. Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM) What is DCIM? DCIM is defined as a comprehensive solution that directly addresses the major issues of asset management, asset deployment, space and resource utilization and future capacity planning. At the highest level, the enterprise data center should be organized and operated to deliver quality service reliably, securely and economically to support the corporate mission. However, the natural evolution of roles and responsibilities among three principal groups within the data center – facilities, networking and systems – has in itself made this objective less achievable. Responsibilities have historically been distributed based on specific expertise relating to the physical layers of the infrastructure:
Facilities: Physical space, power and cooling
Networking: Fiber optic and copper cable plants, LANs, SANs and WANs
Systems: Mainframes, servers, virtual servers and storage
One major challenge is bridging the responsibilities and activities among various data center functions to minimize the delays, waste and potential operational confusion that can easily arise due to each group’s well-‐defined, specific roles.
Facilities
Raised Floors
UPS
PDU/RPP
Rack PDU’s/CRACS
Networking
Structured Cabling
LAN,SAN,WAN
Systems
Mainframes
Servers
VM’s, Apps
Storage
Guide to Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)
General Components and Features of DCIM tools
A Single Repository: One accurate, authoritative database to house all data from across all
data centers and sites of all physical assets, including data center layout, with detailed data for IT, power and HVAC equipment and end-‐to-‐end network and power cable connections.
Asset Discovery and Asset Tracking: Tools to capture assets, their details, relationships
and interdependencies. Visualization: Graphical visualization, tracking and management of all data center assets
and their related physical and logical attributes – servers, structured cable plants, networks, power infrastructure and cooling equipment.
Provisioning New Equipment: Tools to support prompt and reliable deployment of new
systems and all their related physical and logical resources. Real-Time Data Collection: Integration with real-‐time monitoring systems to collect actual
power usage/environmental data to optimize capacity management, allowing review of real-‐time data vs. assumptions around nameplate data.
Process-Driven Structure: Change management workflow procedures to ensure complete
and accurate adds, changes and moves. Capacity Planning: Capacity planning tools to determine requirements for future floor and
rack space, power, cooling expansion, what-‐if analysis and modeling. Reporting: Simplified reporting to set operational goals, measure performance and drive
improvement. A Holistic Approach: Bridge across organizational domains – facilities, networking and
systems, filling all functional gaps; used by all data center domains and groups regardless of hierarchy, including managers, system administrators and technicians.
Guide to Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)
How will DCIM work in MY data center?
Perhaps the easiest way to appreciate the value that DCIM can deliver to your data center is to first consider a few simple questions that come up daily in a typical data center. Then ask yourself, how you and your team would answer them and how quickly your existing process and solutions can answer them:
What servers do we have, where are they and what is their function? How much of their capacity is utilized, what applications run on them and who owns them?
How are these servers powered and how much power do they use? How are they connected to which networks?
Are any servers approaching power or heat thresholds that could cause them to fail?
Do we have a current map of the power chain, network and server dependencies that would tell us what systems or power resources are impacted if a server or circuit fails or a UPS has upcoming scheduled maintenance?
Do we have sufficient power and network connections to add additional servers in this rack?
Where do we have sufficient space, power and cooling capacity in the data center today to support new servers/racks required for a new, critical application?
Think about the specific steps you will need to take with your current processes in order to answer each of those questions:
What data will you need to collect? How much time will it take? What resources will be required to assemble it? How many people will need to be involved, from how many organizational groups? How do you communicate with them and coordinate their activities? How many trips into the data center will be necessary to validate recorded data and collect additional data?
Once you have all available data, what additional analysis will be necessary and how much confidence will you have in the accuracy to act upon it?
When properly deployed, DCIM will be able to visualize the entire data center instantly and drill down to any desired level of granularity to answer these and many other questions with just a few clicks of a mouse from any web-‐enabled device.
Guide to Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)
How do I get started? The challenge many companies face getting started with DCIM is that they are afraid that implementing a full-‐scale solution will take too long or cost too much. The impression they have is that DCIM is complicated. While fully mature DCIM implementations can be complicated, getting started doesn’t have to be. The value realized from your DCIM deployment is directly related to the discipline with which it is used by the entire data center staff. Most critical is the initial population and ongoing maintenance of the DCIM database. Some DCIM vendors provide tools that will automate much of the initial discovery and data capture of your assets/infrastructure – physical and virtual systems, cabling and power chain. These tools can import data from your existing spreadsheets and other sources, first validating, matching and synchronizing with the discovered data. You don’t need to have a fully mature DCIM deployment, one in which you are performing Strategic Data Center Planning, to get tremendous value out of DCIM. In fact, just taking the first step from managing multiple spreadsheets and floor plan diagrams into a consolidated view with a single version of the truth is a very affordable first step that can return huge benefits. Like any other software solution, the value realized from your DCIM implementation is directly related to the discipline with which it is used by the entire data center staff and how tightly integrated it is with other IT processes and software. While your end goal might be to reach the upper right of the DCIM Maturity Model (see diagram) you don’t need to have a fully mature DCIM deployment, one in which you are performing Strategic Data Center Planning, to get tremendous value out of DCIM. In fact, just taking the first step from managing multiple spreadsheets and floor plan diagrams into a consolidated view with a single version of the truth is a very affordable first step that can return huge benefits.
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In addition, a DCIM solution can provide you with a simple automated Change Process with what-‐if models to simplify any required system moves or new system provisioning, while taking maximum advantage of existing space, power and cooling capacity.
Guide to Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)
DCIM Return on Investment
2 3 4 5 1
DCIM Process Maturity
Level 1: Manual • Little documentation • No standard change process • Unrestricted access • Outages commonplace • No predictability
Level 2: Reactive • Fragmented, inaccurate documentation • High error rates (changes) • Reliance on individual heroics • Incident firefighting • Limited monitoring
Level 3: Proactive • Central documentation • Change management process • Limited access • Reliable services • Energy monitoring and measurement
Level 4: Service Oriented • Service-driven approach • Charge-back process • Intelligent (business) capacity management • Infrastructure monitoring strategy • Integrated change configuration (CMDB)
Level 5: Optimization • Eliminate stranded capacity • End-to-end analysis • Agile infrastructure management • Predictive analysis • Dynamic infrastructure
DCIM Maturity Model
Guide to Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)
Summary and Results of an effective DCIM implementation A successful DCIM implementation can be achieved. The key to success is to start small but think big as you progressively make your way through the maturity model. The rewards for implementing a DCIM solution and establishing processes for its use can be immense. Again, consider the predictions and claims below and determine which present the most immediate opportunities. You can do this quickly, but you shouldn’t parallelize the steps. Don’t get overwhelmed by the complexity of the end state of your DCIM deployment. It is important to consider how you can progressively layer on increasing levels of sophistication to your DCIM deployment to ensure success. Like most IT projects, you want to take DCIM step by step. This will increase your likelihood of a successful implementation, and prove the value that a well-‐run data center provides to the entire IT organization and enterprise.
Of the 11.8 million servers in the U.S. in 2007, most are running at 15% capacity or less. (Computerworld)
Close to one-‐fifth of the servers in a data center are no longer used and should be removed. (Computer Associates)
Average data centers are hugely energy inefficient. For every 100 watts these data centers consume, only 2.5 watts result in useful computing. (Rocky Mountain Institute)
The volume growth of IT infrastructure will exceed the available data center floor space for most organizations. By 2011, more than 70% of U.S. enterprise data centers will face tangible disruptions related to energy consumption, floor space and/or costs. (Gartner)
Gartner recommends raising the temperature of data centers to at least 24 °C to lower cooling demands.
Over 50% of data centers expect to be out of space by 2012. (IDC)
Guide to Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)
AlphaPoint Technology and AssetCentral™
At AlphaPoint Technology, our goal is to enhance and support your company’s IT asset management efforts. Whether you have a program in place, looking to start a new one, or are manually tracking your assets with spreadsheets, our team is here to help. With our flagship software, AssetCentral™, we are empowering organizations with increased control and management over their IT assets in a more intuitive, efficient, and visual way. While AssetCentral™ is well positioned to assist your company in the data center; our solution is also well suited to track all of your IT assets throughout the enterprise. Regardless of the size or industry, AssetCentral™ can help your company create order and transparency around the business of budgeting, lifecycle, moves, adds, changes, as well as allocation of assets around employees, locations, and divisions.
5245 Office Park Blvd. Suite 102 Bradenton, FL 34203
Web www.alphapointtech.com Phone 941-‐896-‐7848 info@alphapoint-‐us.com
Guide to Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)